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Articles Tagged: facebook

FBI wants all access to facebook!

May 8th, 2012 | By love not hate

The FBI is asking social media sites and email providers to create a portal for investigators to access potential suspects online activity in an effort to thwart crime.

The federal agency argues that, given the increased dependence on the internet and web services, their court-approved wiretaps are less useful now because fewer people use the phone to make their criminal plans.

At what many civil liberties experts will likely deem a threat to personal privacy and the proprietary information of the privately-owned businesses like Facebook and Skype, the agency is now pushing for a new law to force such companies to help them in their investigations.

Up with the times: The FBI wants to be able to access suspects email and social media accounts in order to get information during an investigationUp with the times: The FBI wants to be able to access suspects email and social media accounts in order to get information during an investigation

CNET obtained a letter from the FBI’s general counsel’s office which will force companies that provide internet messaging or email services to change their code so that they have a portal for the FBI to log into quickly once approved to wiretap a would-be criminal.

The proposed law would change the existing Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act, which was created in 1994 and, as a result, focuses solely on telecommunications companies and not web companies.

 

If the changes go into effect, lawyers with expertise in technology say that the companies would likely require certain provisions before anything became law.

‘Industry would like to see any new legislation include some protections against disclosure of any trade secrets or other confidential information that might be shared with law enforcement, so that they are not released, for example, during open court proceedings,’ Roszel Thomsen told CNET.

Broadening their power: The FBI wants to increase their purview to include online activities in their wiretaps and not just phone conversationsBroadening their power: The FBI wants to increase their purview to include online activities in their wiretaps and not just phone conversations

This is just the latest in the FBI’s attempts to curtail an ongoing issue.

The problem, which insiders have deemed ‘Going Dark’, is what faces the FBI when their surveillance abilities are lessened as technology continues to diversify.

Valerie Caproni, the FBI general counsel in February of last year when the issue was initially raised, said that the advancement of technology and limits of their purview have left the agency ‘increasingly unable’ to gather information on their suspects.

Though the first formal meetings were held between FBI representatives and government officials in June 2008, no specific legislation has been put up for a vote yet, and some experts do not expect that to change anytime soon.

Given the election-season scrutiny of any and all actions by the Obama administration, they are extremely unlikely to put forth new measurements that would cause a potential debate over civil liberties.

 

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FACEBOOK IS ABOUT TO INTRODUCE MUSIC!!!!!!

July 12th, 2011 | By love not hate

A software developer claims to have uncovered evidence pointing to an unannounced music service on Facebook, provisionally called ‘Vibes’.

The reference was spotted in the code for Facebook video calling by Jeff Rose, who wondered whether Facebook’s new Video Chat had used his version of the video-phone program Skype or installed a second copy.

On his blog, Rose wrote: ‘As any curious geek would, I started checking things out.’

Rose says he discovered that it made reference to features called ‘Peep’ for video calling itself and also to ‘Vibes’, an apparent music service

He said a file called FacebookVideoCalling.jar contains Javascript that names the video plugin, com.facebook.peep, while a second application, com.facebook.vibes is linked to MusicDownloadDialog.

More…

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Rose wrote on his blog: ‘The video chat plugin, called peep, is what is downloaded now. At some point in the future they seem to be prepared to download another app though, called Facebook Vibes.

Top geek: Jeff Rose is a software developer who studied computer science in Colorado, Lugano and Amsterdam

Top geek: Jeff Rose is a software developer who studied computer science in Colorado, Lugano and Amsterdam

‘I searched around to see what this is all about, and it seems that this is an unannounced feature that has yet to be released.

‘The vibes app connects with a music download dialog in the page though, so I’m guessing that with this release we are seeing the seeds for Facebook’s upcoming music offering.’

As Facebook Video Chat is not called ‘Peep’, it seems likely that any new music service could have a public name other than ‘Vibes’.

Earlier this year some reports suggested Facebook would announce a tie-up with Spotify, the internet music service.

As Spotify is finally opening to U.S. music fans, that means deals with record labels may well be in place to reach all or most of Facebook’s 750million users around the world.

Last week Facebook announced the deal with Skype that added live video chat to the social networking site – marking the latest step-up in the battle against Google, the internet search engine.

The same week, Google launched its Google+ service, which also has a feature that allows video calls.

Google+, launched on June 28, includes video conferencing for up to 10 people on its application called Hangouts.

The two companies are now locked in a head-to-head technological race and the ability to add music is an added engine of growth for Facebook.

One in every nine people in the world now has a Facebook account, while its number of users has shot up to 750million.

The partnership with Skype brings Facebook closer to Microsoft, which is one of its shareholders after investing $240m in the company in 2007 and bought Skype for $8.5billion in May.

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FaceBook has a face data base and you’ve been TAGED!!!!!!!

June 13th, 2011 | By love not hate

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facebook problems

May 17th, 2011 | By love not hate

(WIRED) — OK, here’s the deal. A big corporate PR firm, Burson-Marsteller, tried to entice USA Today to lambaste a Google feature called Social Circle, on privacy grounds. It also encouraged a security blogger to write an op-ed attacking Google on the product.

Burson would not say the name of its client. But instead of taking the bait, USA Today did due diligence and consulted experts who said that Social Circle was small potatoes compared to more pressing privacy stories.

Instead it published a story about the Burston “whisper campaign” against Google on behalf of a secret client.

Meanwhile the blogger released a damning transcript of his exchange with the sleazy folks from Burson.

Most people would have assumed that the client was Microsoft or AT&T, Google rivals already actively involved in seizing every possible opportunity to take its foe down a notch. But last night we learned that the cowardly accuser was Facebook. Thus exposed, Facebook has ‘fessed up.

This is a stunning story for a number of reasons.

But here’s what makes the least sense — if there were privacy problems about Facebook information in Google Social Circle (which has now been transformed into a different product called Social Search), they may well have been a result of Facebook’s own practices.

Facebook was griping that Google is getting information about its users without permission. But some information that users share with Facebook is available publicly, even to people who aren’t their friends in in their social networks — or even are members of Facebook.

It’s not because outsiders raided the service and exposed that information. It’s because Facebook chose to expose it.

Facebook used to have an implicit promise with its users. Basically the deal was what goes on Facebook stays on Facebook. But over the past couple of years Facebook has chosen to alter the deal.

Certain profile information became available outside of Facebook, easily searchable via Google and other means. (Users can opt out of showing this but relatively few do.) Some of that profile information includes a few of the people on the user’s friend list. By repeatedly pinging public profiles, it’s possible for Google or anyone else to figure out pretty much all your friends.

This information is a lot easier to unearth from inside Facebook, but actually logging into Facebook to purloin information would indeed be troublesome. For one thing, it would violate the terms of service agreement.

Is Google doing this? One of the Burson operatives implied that it is. But Google says the company does not go inside Facebook to scrape information, and I find this credible. (If Facebook has logs to prove this serious charge, let’s see them.)

When Google launched Social Search, it also said specifically that it was not going to learn about Facebook connections by mining the Web as described above. Just how Google does get Facebook information is complicated, but as Danny Sullivan of Search Engine Land concluded after an extensive look, much of it seems to be by permission.

Things should be more clear when Google prepares a more detailed briefing on this, which I assume it is preparing at this moment. Or maybe Facebook will directly spell out its charges now that it’s been outed.

But even if Google did scrape information from the public web, would that be so bad? You can argue whether or not Google would be crossing a privacy line by doing this. (And, remember, Google says it is not mining that public information.) But it’s an argument with a pro and con. What you cannot argue is that is not Google but Facebook that puts some Facebook information into the open Web.

That is why Facebook’s campaign is so weird. If outsiders are going to examine how third-party companies get information about Facebook’s users, you can’t help but question why some Facebook information, by default, shows up on the open web.

Also, consider this excerpt from the letter Burson’s operative named John Mercurio wrote to gin up an attack without Facebook’s fingerprints on it. “Google’s latest plan,” he wrote, “totally disregards the intimate and potentially damaging details that could be revealed, including sexual orientation, political affiliation, personal connections, etc…”

This is ironic since, in my experience, Facebook user profiles with such information are much easier to view that they were in the early days of the service. Unless people actively take steps to opt out, it’s possible for “friends of friends” (i.e., strangers) to view someone’s personal information on Facebook.

And it was also remarkable that the Burson operative wailed about the privacy implications of letting millions of people examine a Facebook user’s friend list. In my experience the vast majority of Facebook users do not take the steps to hide their connections, a list which is open by default to half a billion Facebook users.

Any responsible journalistic (or congressional) examination of the Burson charges would wind up asking questions about these Facebook privacy issues.

Given this, I conclude that Facebook was running a smear campaign against itself.

Over the next couple of years, the privacy practices of many companies — especially Google and Facebook — will come under severe scrutiny. Essentially it is neither company that is the cause of our privacy dilemma. It is the internet itself. The internet makes a broadcast of what once was a whisper.

The internet raises to the top of our attention embarrassing items that once would have faded into obscurity. The internet allows strangers and the ill-intentioned to aggregate innocuous personal data into a devastatingly revealing dossier.

The internet also allows companies to monetize our private information without our full knowledge. (Burying snoop tactics in the dense text of a privacy policy is not a justification.) And that gives profit-making firms a powerful incentive to abuse our privacy.

These companies want our trust. They even want us to hold off strong legislation and allow them to self regulate. And now here comes Facebook, doing one of the dumbest things imaginable.

It tried to beam attention on a privacy problem of a rival, but exposed itself as a sneaky maligner. Furthermore, the sorts of privacy fears Facebook evokes are exactly the sort that makes people worried about Facebook.

Not the greatest way to win our trust.

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FaceBook will start renting movies

March 9th, 2011 | By love not hate

The studio, which says it is the first to offer movies directly on the social media site, aims to roll out additional titles over the coming months.

Warner Bros. is turning to Facebook, where it hopes to find an electronic audience interested in digitally renting The Dark Knight.

Warners said Monday that it is the first Hollywood studio to offer movies directly on Facebook. Friends of Christopher Nolan’s Knight, the second of his two Batman movies, can rent the film by going to its official Facebook page and clicking a “rent” icon to apply Facebook Credits. The cost per rental is 30 Facebook Credits, or $3.

Viewers will have 48 hours from the purchase to watch the movie, which can be viewed full screen and also paused and resumed within that period. While watching the movie, consumers will also have full Facebook functionality, including the ability to post comments, interact with friends and update their status.

“Facebook has become a daily destination for hundreds of millions of people,” said Thomas Gewecke, president of Warner Bros. Digital Distribution. “Making our films available through Facebook is a natural extension of our digital distribution efforts. It gives consumers a simple, convenient way to access and enjoy our films through the world’s largest social network.”

While the Knight offering is described as a test, Warners also said that additional titles for both rental and purchase will be rolled out over the coming months.

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